Implant Placement

The Dental Implant Surgical Procedure

The procedure to place a dental implant takes 30 to 60 minutes for one implant and only 2 to 3 hours for multiple implants. The number of appointments and time required vary from patient to patient. 

Prior to surgery, you may receive antibiotics and for greater comfort, intravenous sedation or nitrous oxide (laughing gas). These options are discussed with you at your consultation appointment. A local anesthetic will be administered to numb the area where the dental implant will be placed.

Missing Teeth? Consider Dental Implants today!

Request an appointment with one of our top-rated Oral Surgeon’s

When you are comfortable, the surgeon makes a small incision in the gum tissue to reveal the bone, creates space using special instruments, and gently inserts the titanium implant. The top of this implant is often visible through the gum. Sometimes it is better in the early stages of healing to have the implant covered by the gum tissue.

Dental implant placement illustration: the upper jaw with all normal teeth
1. Normal
Dental implant placement illustration: the upper jaw missing a front tooth with the jaw bone unhealed
2. Tooth Loss
Dental implant placement illustration: a healed upper jaw bone after a front tooth is gone
3. Healed Bone
Dental implant placement illustration: the initial dental implant placed in the upper front jaw bone
4. Implant Placed
Dental implant placement illustration: upper jaw bone healed after dental implant placement
5. Healing
Dental implant placement illustration: a fully restored upper front tooth using a dental implant
6. Implant Restored

Dental Implants Presentation

To provide you with a better understanding of dental implants, we have provided the following multimedia presentation. Many common questions pertaining to dental implants are discussed.

Dental Implants Presentation

When are dental implants placed?

Implants are often placed several months after extraction. At times, an implant may be placed immediately after extraction of a tooth. This may involve a little more risk, but it simplifies the process—you won’t have to wait for another appointment to place the implant. When infection or other problems with the bone are present, immediate implant placement is not the best treatment.

If your tooth has been missing for some time, the adjacent support bone is likely to grow thinner and shrink. This occurs because the root of the natural tooth has to be present to stimulate the bone. As much as one-third of your jaw’s thickness can be lost in the year following tooth extraction. If you are missing enough bone, you may benefit from having additional bone grafted into the area. This ensures the implant will be adequately supported when it is placed in the jaw.